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Cyberculture and by
* Escape Velocity: Cyberculture at the End of the Century, a nonfiction book on cyberpunk by Mark Dery
* The Friendly Orange Glow: The Story of the PLATO System and the Dawn of Cyberculture, a forthcoming book by Brian L. Dear

Cyberculture and David
Georgetown University began offering a related master's program in that year, and at the University of Maryland, David Silver created the Resource Center for Cyberculture Studies on the web.

Cyberculture and .
Fred Turner discusses the creation of the Whole Earth Review in From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the Rise of Digital Utopianism.
Cyberculture is the culture that has emerged, or is emerging, from the use of computer networks for communication, entertainment, and business.
* William S. Haney, " Cyborg Revelation: Marge Piercy's He, She and It ", chapter 9 of " Cyberculture, Cyborgs and Science Fiction: Consciousness and the Posthuman ( Rodopi 2006, ISBN 90-420-1948-4 )
* Heather Hicks ( 2002 ) " Striking Cyborgs: Reworking the ' Human ' in Marge Piercy's He, She and It pp. 85-106 IN: Mary Flanagan & Austin Booth ( editors ), Reload: Rethinking Women and Cyberculture.
" Deus Ex Machina: Technopaganism ," in Escape Velocity: Cyberculture at the End of the Century.
On the research side, Internet Studies intersects with studies of Cyberculture, Human-Computer Interaction, and Science and Technology Studies.
* Internet culture: including the emergence of Internet slang and Cyberculture.
FringeWare Review was a magazine about Subculture ( predominantly Cyberculture ) published in Austin, Texas.
* Kozinets, Robert V. ( 1998 ), “ On Netnography: Initial Reflections on Consumer Research Investigations of Cyberculture ,” in Advances in Consumer Research, Volume 25, ed., Joseph Alba and Wesley Hutchinson, Provo, UT: Association for Consumer Research, 366-371.

key and Concepts
Concepts of centripetal and centrifugal force played a key early role in establishing the set of inertial frames of reference and the significance of fictitious forces, even aiding in the development of general relativity in which gravity itself becomes a fictitious force.
Underhill's multilingual studies of key concepts, truth, love, hate & war, ( in ' Ethnolinguistics & Cultural Concepts ', Cambridge UP 2012 ) investigate the uniqueness of each of these concepts in different languages ( English, French, German and Czech ).
More recently, Frith has edited a four-volume set, Popular Music: Critical Concepts in Media & Cultural Studies ( Routledge, 2004 ), and published a collection of his key essays, Taking Popular Music Seriously: Selected Essays ( Ashgate, 2007 ).
Concepts of vertical ( chordal ) versus horizontal ( melody ) are key ideas in the work of George Russell, whom Coltrane had recorded with in September 1958.
The decoy and jammer configurations are key enablers supporting the Air Force Global Strike, Global Response, Space and C4ISR, and the Air and Space Expeditionary Force Concepts of Operations.

key and edited
This includes three of Engelbart's key papers, edited into book form by Yuri Rubinsky and Christina Engelbart to commemorate the presentation of the 1995 SoftQuad Web Award to Doug Engelbart at the World Wide Web conference in Boston in December 1995.
Merril later popularized this fiction in the United States through her edited anthology England Swings SF: Stories of Speculative Fiction ( Doubleday 1968 ), although an earlier anthology ( Harlan Ellison's Dangerous Visions 1967 ) has also come to be referred to as a key work of New Wave science fiction.
The Polkinghorne Reader ( edited by Thomas Jay Oord ) provides key excerpts from Polkinghorne's most influential books.
The user enters and edits a line, but it is held locally within the terminal emulator as it is being edited and not transmitted until the user signals ( usually with the key on the keyboard or a " send " button of some sort on the user interface ) the completion of the line.
A key issue in the definition of any ACL-based security model is determining how access control lists are edited, namely which users and processes are granted ACL-modification access.
Another one, Liu Ji, became one of Zhu's key advisors, and edited the military-technology treatise titled Huolongjing in later years.
The shows had to be further edited to remove adult language and sexual references to make them suitable for the desired family timeslot, and hence the plots often became confusing as key scenes were removed and much of the humour was lost.
A number of symbolic interactionists have addressed these topics, the best known being Sheldon Stryker's structural symbolic interactionism and the formulations of interactionism heavily influenced by this approach ( sometimes referred to as the " Indiana School " of symbolic interactionism ), including the works of key scholars in sociology and psychology using different methods and theories applying a structural version of interactionism that are represented in a 2003 collection edited by Burke et al.
Over the next six years, he edited twenty issues that featured most, if not all, of the key Revival poets and carried reviews of books and magazines from the wide range of small presses that had sprung up to publish them.
Over the next six years, he edited twenty issues that featured most, if not all, of the key poets associated with the British Poetry Revival and carried reviews of books and magazines from the wide range of small presses that had sprung up to publish them.
: In this mode, the terminal provides a local line editing function, and sends an entire input line, after it has been locally edited, when the user presses a key.
He edited this key journal of German economics and administration until 1924.
The key surviving manuscript sources were gradually located, edited and translated, monuments identified and published, and other essential groundwork in recording stories, music and language done.
The computer company Compaq even edited their FAQ to explain that the " any " key does not exist, and at one point considered replacing the command " Press any key " with " Press return key ".
Most of the edits were for violence, although several key / memorable scenes were edited for time / clarity.
The first part of the book goes to a new translation of a study of Operation Citadel ( the great tank battle of Kursk ) edited by General Theodor Busse, which offers the perspectives of key tank, infantry, and air commanders.
The same year, he also edited the Earl of Surrey's poems with an essay on early blank verse, translated the Song of Solomon, and published a key to the New Testament.
* Editorial & Opinion pages: feature incisive commentary by the WSJ ’ s global editorial team and attract comment from prominent politicians, captains of industry and key influencers from around the world, edited for Europe by Brian Carney
After leaving Marvel UK, Skinn founded and edited Warrior, which featured key works by Alan Moore.
Some series have been heavily edited to comply to American audience stereotypes, either to add elements that increase the series appeal to a key demographic, or to remove elements that may detract from that demographic.
He was instrumental in the production of ' The Expansion of International Society ' ( 1984 ), edited with Hedley Bull, a key text of the English school of international relations.

key and by
The symposium provides an opportunity to confront the self with specific statements which were made at particular times by identifiable communicators who were addressing definite audiences -- and throughout several hundred pages everyone is talking about the same key symbol of identification.
No warden or guard to touch lock, key or doorknob except when accompanied by a prisoners' committee with powers of veto.
Called a `` Slo-Flo '' meter it was designed for this job by Power Plus Industries of Los Angeles, a key individual being Don Nelson.
Over a relatively short period of time, usually about four to twelve weeks, the worker must be able to shift the focus, back and forth, between immediate external stressful exigencies ( `` precipitating stress '' ) and the key, emotionally relevant issues ( `` underlying problem '' ) which are, often in a dramatic preconscious breakthrough, reactivated by the crisis situation, and hence once again amenable to resolution.
In order to focus clearly upon the operation of this one force, which we may call the effect of `` public-limit pricing '' on `` key '' wage bargains, we deliberately simplify the model by abstracting from other forces, such as union power, which may be relevant in an actual situation.
A $25 billion advertising budget in an $800 billion economy was envisioned for the 1970s here Tuesday by Peter G. Peterson, head of one of the world's greatest camera firms, in a key address before the American Marketing Assn..
The committee debated the possibility of a shift key function ( like the Baudot code ), which would allow more than 64 codes to be represented by six bits.
Nevertheless, the weak government created by the Articles became a matter of concern for key nationalists.
In implementing its strategy to regain political dominance over post-Soviet countries by taking over their economic infrastructure, the Russian state, since 2000, has acquired several key assets in the energy sector and Soviet-era industrial plants.
The urn is stolen by alien robots, as the burnt stump inside is part of a key needed to unlock the " Wikkit Gate " and release an imprisoned world called Krikkit.
The algorithm described by AES is a symmetric-key algorithm, meaning the same key is used for both encrypting and decrypting the data.
During this operation, each column is multiplied by the known matrix that for the 128 bit key is
The largest successful publicly known brute force attack against any block-cipher encryption was against a 64-bit RC5 key by distributed. net in 2006.
His reign was marred by a constitutional struggle with the Aragonese nobles, which eventually culminated in the articles of the Union of Aragon-the so-called " Magna Carta of Aragon ", which devolved several key royal powers into the hands of lesser nobles.
Under the 4th century version of democracy the roles of general and of key political speaker in the assembly tended to be filled by different persons.
Each antibody binds to a specific antigen by way of an interaction similar to the fit between a lock and a key.
The early 1960s and 1970s ( up until his death in 1976 ) were marked by key works in Helsinki, in particular the huge town plan for the void in centre of Helsinki adjacent to Töölö Bay and the vast railway yards, and marked on the edges by significant buildings such as the National Museum and the main railway station, both by Eliel Saarinen.
Today automated flight control is common to reduce pilot error and workload at key times like landing or takeoff. Autopilot was first invented by Lawrence Sperry during World War II to fly bomber planes steady enough to hit precision targets from 25, 000 feet.
This key result opened the way for a proof of the Weil conjectures, ultimately completed by his student Pierre Deligne.
In computer science, an array data structure or simply an array is a data structure consisting of a collection of elements ( values or variables ), each identified by at least one array index or key.
Bibas argues, " These procedures may be constitutional and efficient, but they undermine key values served by admissions of guilt in open court.
All the cars established a good racing pedigree for the firm, but the DB4 was the key to establishing the company's reputation, which was cemented by the famous DB5 in 1963.
Atonal music has no key signature, and is characterized by the exploration of internal numeric relationships.

2.396 seconds.